2008
A Differential Role for BB0365 in the Persistence of Borrelia burgdorferi in Mice and Ticks
Pal U, Dai J, Li X, Neelakanta G, Luo P, Kumar M, Wang P, Yang X, Anderson JF, Fikrig E. A Differential Role for BB0365 in the Persistence of Borrelia burgdorferi in Mice and Ticks. The Journal Of Infectious Diseases 2008, 197: 148-155. PMID: 18171298, DOI: 10.1086/523764.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsVertebrate hostsWild-type B. burgdorferiArthropod vectorsB. burgdorferi persistenceB. burgdorferi transcriptomeDiverse murine tissuesSpirochete life cycleLife cycleB. burgdorferi B31Lyme disease agentGene productsMurine tissuesGenesWild rodentsDisease agentsDifferential rolesFeeding ticksB. burgdorferiInfectious isolatesHostBorrelia burgdorferiTicksTranscriptomePersistence of BorreliaMutants
2003
Borrelia burgdorferi transcriptome in the central nervous system of non-human primates
Narasimhan S, Camaino M, Liang FT, Santiago F, Laskowski M, Philipp MT, Pachner AR, Radolf JD, Fikrig E. Borrelia burgdorferi transcriptome in the central nervous system of non-human primates. Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America 2003, 100: 15953-15958. PMID: 14671329, PMCID: PMC307674, DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2432412100.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsNon-human primate modelB. burgdorferiEffect of dexamethasoneCentral nervous systemHost metabolic pathwaysNon-human primatesNeurological symptomsPaucibacillary natureCNS milieuImmune statusCommon manifestationPrimate modelNervous systemExpression profilesLyme diseaseHost factorsHeart tissueGene expressionB. burgdorferi transcriptomeBorrelia burgdorferiNHPNeuroborreliosisImmunocompetentVivo gene expressionBurgdorferi